Dale Matson
Click On Photograph To Enlarge
Reflection Lake 17 Miles From Road's End In Kings Canyon
Early each morning as Sharon and I walk our Airedales at
Woodward Park in Fresno, I look to the east to see the formidable dark, jagged
and silent form of the Sierra Nevada stretched across the horizon.
The mountains are an orienting feature on the eastern edge
of the Central Valley of California and they are an organizing feature in my
life. During the day, clouds building over the Sierra remind you that you are
looking east. The clouds are also a sign of hope. Maybe rain will fall in the
higher elevations on a hot summer day in the Central Valley.
I really don’t need a
reason to go to the mountains. Sometimes I go there to look for a lost soul as
a member of the civilian mountaineering unit of the Fresno County Sheriff’s
Office.
25 years ago I ran the trails. I knew that one day I would
be a backpacker when my legs lost their speed. I would have to go overnight to
go far enough. I was a “Fast Packer” for a few years and could do 20-mile days.
Today the realities of aging and adjusted priorities have
slowed me even more. If only. If only I could still average even 2 miles an
hour or one hour per thousand feet of climb. But the main reason I am there now
is for photographs. Photographs help with memories and hopefully faithfully
render the beauty I have seen. The photographs are part of my legacy to be
passed down to others. A single photograph of Reflection Lake Mike White used
on the cover of his book on Kings Canyon was all of the incentive I needed to
travel there myself. I hope some of my photographs and stories have motivated
others to go into the wilderness also. Maybe I am kind of a wilderness docent.
I have to chuckle how reckless I was as a trail runner. My
gear consisted of a water bottle, Iodine tablets for water resupply and energy
gel. I still remember the Yosemite training runs from Glacier Point and Happy
Isle. Merced Lake, Half Dome and Cloud’s Rest were common destinations. In
fact, these trails were well-marked, well-traveled and low risk. I skied
Glacier Point Road in the spring with the same amount of gear.
Today, day hikes require 10 pounds of gear and my “bare
necessities” for backpacking amount to 35 lbs. I am ritualistic and somewhat
compulsive about making sure I have everything I need. I think of the
adventurer Mike Horn who needed rituals to avoid life and death situations in
his arctic travels. Zipper pockets help if you remember to close them!
I continue to struggle with my weight. That is a variable
over which I have some control. My best weight as a runner was 160 (what I
weighed when I graduated from High School). My Triathlon weight was closer to
165 lbs. I am currently 170 pounds and realize that if I get down to 165 (where
I should be), I will have taken off the weight of my camera gear. 5 pounds is
considerable. It is also the weight of my tent and sleeping bag combined. I
usually lose a pound a day on the trail. To me, being overweight is foolish if
I spend loads of money on lightweight gear.
I also think of Galen Rowell. His photographs and technique
are instructive to me. He knew the territory intimately (Eastern Sierra). He
knew when the light would be best at a particular place. He was a trail runner
who carried his camera on his chest. He was also a climber who took many of his
photographs hanging on a granite wall from a rope.
I have learned so much about the Sierra Nevada Mountains and
myself over the years but I still know very little about both.
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